Antinuclear

Australian news, and some related international items

Job losses at BHP’s uranium mine

Olympic mine job losses The Age BARRY FITZGERALD November 7, 2009 BHP Billiton has warned of job losses among its contractor workforce at the damaged Olympic Dam copper-gold-uranium mine in South Australia Continue reading

November 6, 2009 Posted by | 1, business, South Australia, uranium | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Al Gore’s serious doubts on viability of ‘clean coal’

clean-coal-not-the-answer-gore The Age ANNE DAVIES, WASHINGTON 6 Nov

AUSTRALIA should not bank on being able to reduce its greenhouse emissions by storing carbon dioxide from coal-fired power plants, US climate advocate Al Gore has said.

A day after The Age revealed plans by the Brumby Government to gamble on “clean coal” technology in Victoria, Mr Gore expressed serious doubt about its viability and said Australia’s focus should instead be on renewable energy.

“I think a country like Australia probably has more usable and profitable sources of renewable energy than any other nation,” Mr Gore said in an interview with The Age.

“You have desert areas, abundant sunlight within tens of kilometres of most of your major cities.

“You have the ability to construct an Australian super-grid that will transmit that solar and wind and geothermal power straight to the cities . . . and in the process create lots of good new jobs.”…………”What should be discarded is any illusion that (carbon capture and storage) will be available any time soon at a scale large enough to make a dent in our CO2 emissions,” he said……………..http://www.theage.com.au/world/clean-coal-not-the-answer-gore-20091105-hz4k.html

November 6, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, climate change - global warming, energy | , , , , | Leave a comment

Paid puppets spout ‘climate scepticism’

I know who I prefer to believe in debate TheAge Lynne Holroyd, 6 Nov 09

AL GORE   is right when he points to the phoney war of the climate science ”debate”. On one hand is the scientific consensus and on the other are the loony theories financed by those with the most to lose if we cut carbon emissions.

The mouthpieces and puppets of the big polluters are just as hard at work in Australia as they are in the US, where there are four industry lobbyists working against climate change action for every member of the US Congress. Funny how the handful of ventriloquist dolls of Australia’s big polluters tend to be geologists who study rocks – not climate, atmosphere and oceans. Geologists are typically employed by big mining companies. Think the carbon lobby – coal, oil, gas – those fighting the Government-proposed carbon pollution bill tooth and nail.

On the other hand, warning us about the imminent dangers of climate change are the thousands of independent, disinterested climate experts of high repute who checked one another’s findings and published their report in 2007, a report signed off and agreed to by more than 100 countries. I know who I would prefer to believe.

http://www.theage.com.au/national/letters/guilty-until-proven-innocent-20091105-i04s.html

November 6, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, climate change - global warming, energy, spinbuster, uranium | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Powerful influence of big polluting industries

revealed-polluters-fear-tactics-on-climate Brisbane Times MARIAN WILKINSON AND FLINT DUXFIELD

November 6, 2009

BIG greenhouse polluting companies around the world, employing thousands of lobbyists, are exerting heavy pressure on governments to weaken climate change laws at home and slow progress on an international climate agreement in Copenhagen, a global investigation reveals.

In Australia, 20 companies who have already won the most concessions from the Rudd Government’s emissions trading scheme employ 28 lobbying firms with well over 100 staff, many of them former politicians, political advisers or government officials.

In the US there are more than 2800 climate lobbyists, five for every member of Congress, an increase of more than 400 per cent over the past six years. From Washington to Canberra and New Delhi to Brussels, companies and their lobbyists are often raising the same widespread fears about jobs, power blackouts and economic losses unless governments weaken commitments to combat climate change.The report by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists examined the climate lobby in eight countries including the US, Canada, Australia, India, Japan, China, Belgium and Brazil. It relied on more than 200 interviews, lobbying registers and political donation records. ………………In the US, chief executives of coal and power companies have hosted a public campaign against climate legislation which is being blocked in the Senate……….

Industry lobby groups have also carved out a permanent role at the UN talks as representatives of the so-called BINGOS – Business and Industry Non-Government Organisations.

While lobbyists for the renewable energy industry, the carbon traders and environmental groups are also becoming more prominent, the report finds that their voices ”can barely be heard above the clamour of the older, well-capitalised and deeply entrenched industries that have been lobbying on climate change for more than 20 years”.http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/revealed-polluters-fear-tactics-on-climate-20091106-i0ju.html

November 6, 2009 Posted by | climate change - global warming, energy, secrets and lies, uranium | , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Australia should be leader in renewable energy

Get a supergrid The Geelong Advertiser, Gavin Brown 6 Nov 09 “…………………….The most powerful claim from coal and nuclear supporters is that renewable energy cannot provide baseload power, as it is not available at all times in the day. This is a partial truth.  A small number of isolated series of solar and wind stations will not provide baseload power, however, as our renewable energy supply becomes larger and the variety of electricity-generation types increases, the variations in natural factors such as wind, sun, tides and waves cease to become a significant problem.

In fact, such a system would be less susceptible to power outages than our current system.  If technologies such as hydro power, geothermal and bioenergy (burning crop waste) are included in the mix, these can allow simple fine-tuning of electricity supply to allow for variations in demand. Another common argument is that we need nuclear power to bridge the gap while renewable energy technologies develop to the point where they can replace coal.  This argument is completely misleading.  Many of the emerging renewable energy technologies will be able to provide large quantities of baseload power in Australia well before we can develop nuclear reactors or  prove the concept of carbon capture and storage.

In spite of all this talk about other technologies, a great majority of the renewable energy available to us is solar.  So the solution to the debate depends upon relatively new technologies in solar power, a rapidly developing field.  One new technology is called concentrated solar power (CSP).  This uses hundreds of mirrors to concentrate the suns rays onto solar panels.  A group in Europe has developed a concept called DESERTEC, which involves placing CSP arrays in desert areas in the Middle East and North Africa and transmitting the power generated from these throughout Europe, the Middle East and North Africa via a supergrid comprising super-efficient, high-speed, high-voltage transmission lines.

The DESERTEC foundation estimates it only needs to cover 0.3 per cent of the Sahara Desert with CSP plants to power these areas with electricity, with less than three per cent of the Sahara needed to power the world.  Other scientific research has proved  wind power could theoretically supply the entire world with 40 times the electricity used in the world today (and five times the total energy used)……………….Why is Australia not developing its own version of DESERTEC?  We have a massive solar supply in our desert regions, many windy areas throughout the nation, great waves, plenty of rubbish (biomass) and one of the largest geothermal energy supplies in the world right here in Geelong.  We have the scientific talent to make it happen _ if we get moving before our scientists all leave the country.

Manufacturers have left the country and the mining boom will one day be over.  Our country will have to start producing sustainable incomes   to adjust to this reality.  An Australian supergrid is the simplest way for us   to take a leadership position in the response to climate change and allow our economy to continue to flourish  into the future.http://www.geelongadvertiser.com.au/article/2009/11/06/119155_opinion.html

November 6, 2009 Posted by | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, climate change - global warming, energy | , , , , , , | Leave a comment